The Doctor (Peter Davison) and Nyssa (Sarah Sutton) are chased across Alaska by a savage monster and take shelter in a tycoon's house. Isolated by the weather and the terrifying aftermath of the chase
The cast of characters is straight out of an Agatha Christie story. The materialistic million Shaun Brett (Christopher Scott); the adopted heir Tulung (Neil Roberts).
The story treads familiar Doctor Who territory. Lots of tropes that I enjoy: strange creatures, physics, and restricted environments. Plus, the money-grubbing evil tycoon, because they seem so much less powerful than the real-life versions.
But it's hard to ignore the exoticism around First Nations culture, embodied by Tulung. Sadly this is not new in Who, but it is frustrating to bump up against it again and again. I think Tulung also falls into the “educated savage” trope, who despite his eloquence and education is always treated as lesser because of his origins.
I did enjoy it overall: great voice acting, good dynamic between characters, fantastic monster sound effects. Despite the hand-wavey mythology, it's still an interesting and fast-moving story.
A short webseries about a software developer who gets post-humously uploaded to a virtual afterlife, but... not is all as it seems...
With sitcom-length episodes, they're well-paced and flow well. It has the aesthetic and some of the tropes of The Good Place. The better comparison, however, is probably Avenue 5, with its dark humour and pointed portrayal of capitalism.
The show is set in a capitalist dystopia of an America, but remains surprisingly optimistic. It captures spoilt rich kids (and adults who remain forever kids because of who they are) to a tee, and exploring what a future shaped by virtual reality could look like. The relationships between characters are heartfelt though, and I thought the kid characters in particular were well-written.
Exploring what personhood and empirical reality looks like when the virtual alternative is almost indistinguishable raises plenty of ethical grey areas, and the series alludes to them, though it never quite goes into exploring them.
Even before I watched it, I knew I would add this movie to my “comfort watching” list. It is delightful from start to finish.
David Copperfield tells the story of the many families he's been in, the many lives and names that he's taken up. Moving from poverty to riches, London to Kent to Yarmouth, each story has a distinct voice.
The casting is incredible. Dev Patel would make a fantastic Doctor – there's Hugh Laurie and Peter Capaldi, who are underrated comics both, the pair of eyebrow fiends – Ben Whishaw plays Uriah Heep to slimy perfection.
Oh it is so good and it feels like a warm cup of tea with slightly dodgy homemade cookies.
A Japanese TV series centred around a diner which opens only from midnight to 7 am.
The scarred owner explicitly hints at a mysterious dark past, but that rarely plays a big role. Most of the characters are people society wouldn't consider “respectable”, or who don't fit in.
The food featured is incredibly simple, but not plain. Butter rice, omelettes, ochazuke – all staples of home cooking, all things that one could cook at home. And while it teeters on the edge, it doesn't fall into the trap of sentimentality and cloying sweetness.
Each episode clocks in at 20 minutes – short and sweet for a meal break...